| Geert Lovink on Thu, 16 Oct 2008 12:22:25 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime-ann> Renée van de Vall, At the Edges of Vision |
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http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&pageSubject=322&title_id=7156&edition_id=7731
Renée van de Vall, At the Edges of Vision: A Phenomenological
Aesthetics of Contemporary Spectatorship, (Ashgate, 2008).
In At the Edges of Vision, Renée van de Vall re-examines the
aesthetics of spectatorship in terms of new-media art and visual
culture. The aesthetic experience of visual art has traditionally been
described in terms of the distanced contemplation and critical
interpretation of the work's form and representational content. Recent
developments in installation, video and computer art have foregrounded
the bodily and affective engagement of the spectator and, in
retrospect, throw into question the model of spectatorial distance for
more traditional art forms as well. But what does this development
entail for art's potential for reflective, imaginative and
experiential depth? Is art still capable of providing a critical
counterpoint to the ubiquitous presence of sensational, yet short-
lived media imagery when it speaks to the senses rather than to the
mind?
In a thorough examination of examples from painting, film,
installation art and interactive video, and computer art, Van de Vall
argues for a tactile and affective conception of reflection, linking
philosophy and art. Looking at a Rembrandt self-portrait and
navigating through an internet art work have in common that both types
of work rely on a playful, rhythmically structured, sensuous and
embodied reflexivity for the articulation of meaning. This sensuous
dimension of playful reflexivity is just as important in philosophical
thought, however, as the transcendental condition for genuine, open-
ended reflection.
Drawing on the philosophy of Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, Lyotard
and Deleuze on the one hand and on new-media theory on the other, Van
de Vall develops a performative phenomenology of aesthetic reflection,
visuality and visual art, in order to rethink art's ethical and
political relevance in present-day digital-media culture.
*
Contents: Introduction; Space without hiding places: Merleau-
Ponty's discussion of linear perspective; Touching the face: the
ethical dimension of visuality between Levinas and a Rembrandt self-
portrait; Between battlefield and play: on art and aesthetics in
visual culture; Criticism from within: on reflection and aesthetic
feeling; The mediation of passibility: art and interactive
spectatorship; Bibliography; Index.
*
About the Author: Renée van de Vall Associate Professor,
Faculty of Arts and Culture, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands.
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